• Watch recaps of the Supreme Court hearings on DOMA and Prop 8. Mention that you are there for the event and 10 percent of your dinner bill will be donated to Georgia Equality.

“A growing majority of people across the nation see that Proposition 8 and laws like it are unfair, unlawful, and contrary to basic American values. It is time for the Supreme Court to recognize our Constitution’s promise of marriage equality for all,” Umhoefer said when AFER filed its brief with the Supreme Court. “And when that day comes, we will be more American.”

The next day, the nation’s highest court will hear a challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act, the 1996 law that denies federal marriage rights to same-sex couples.

Edith Windsor, now 83 years old, married her partner of more than four decades, Thea Spyer, in Canada in 2007. When Spyer died in 2009, Windsor was hit with an inheritance tax bill of more than $360,000, which she would not have owed if the government recognized her marriage. Windsor sued with help from American Civil Liberties Union.

“The four decades that Edie Windsor spent with her late spouse are a testament to the words ‘in sickness and in health, till death do us part,’” said James Esseks, director of the ACLU LGBT Project, when the Supreme Court agreed to take the case. “After building their lives together and getting married, it is unfair for the federal government to treat them as though they were legal strangers.”

The Proposition 8 case has the biggest potential impact. AFER argues that denying same-sex couples the right to marry violates the U.S. Constitution’s 14th amendment guarantees of due process and equal protection, so a total win could pave the way for same-sex marriage around the country.

Big losses in either case, meanwhile, could make it much more difficult to win marriage equality — especially at the federal level — until the U.S. Congress repeals DOMA or passes pro-active marriage legislation, or until the make-up of the Supreme Court has changed enough that a new case might yield a different decision.

In short, a loss could create “a generation of delay,” said Jon Davidson, legal director for Lambda Legal, which has filed briefs supporting marriage equality in both cases.

But the possible outcomes are much more complicated than simply if LGBT advocates win, gay marriage will be legal around the country, and if they don’t, it won’t.

In addition to what the court decides in these cases, how it reaches the decision could also prove key to gay rights cases in the future.

“One of the most important issues the court might decide, which is possible with many outcomes in both cases, is what level of judicial scrutiny should be applied to laws based on sexual orientation,” Davidson said.

Those arguing in favor of same-sex couples, as well as the Obama administration, have said the court should apply “heightened scrutiny” instead of simply “rational basis.”

“Rational basis” would presume that laws based on sexual orientation are constitutional, and places the burden on the party challenging the law to show it does not rationally further any legitimate government interest.

“Heightened scrutiny,” however, would presume such laws are unconstitutional and the burden would be on the government to show that they substantially further an important government objective.

“That’s a harder test to meet,” Davidson said, and could have implications for other laws dealing with sexual orientation, such as those related to employment discrimination, adoption, and other issues.

Friends of the court (but not necessarily friends of ours)

The two gay marriage cases pending before the Supreme Court have drawn dozens of amicus curiae or “friend-of-the-court” briefs from organizations, state governments, companies and even individuals anxious to weigh in on what could be a defining moment for lesbian and gay rights.

Here are few of the “friends” (some not-so-friendly to our community) who have either submitted their own briefs or signed briefs submitted by multiple sources.

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